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The Country Doctor


By Will Carleton


 

There's a gathering in the village, that has never been outdone
Since the soldiers took their muskets to the war of '61,
And a lot of lumber wagons near the church upon the hill,
And a crowd of country people, Sunday dressed and very still.
Now each window is preempted by a dozen heads or more,
Now the spacious pews are crowded from the pulpit to the door;
For with coverlet of blackness on his portly figure spread,
Lies the grim old country doctor, in a massive oaken bed,

Lies the fierce old country doctor,
Lies the kind old country doctor,

Whom the populace considered with a mingled love and dread.

Maybe half the congregation, now of great or little worth,
Found this watcher waiting for them, when they came upon the earth;
This undecorated soldier, of a hard, unequal strife,
Fought in many stubborn battles with the foes that sought their life.
In the nighttime or the daytime, he would rally brave and well,
Though the summer lark was fifing or the frozen lances fell;
Knowing, if he won the battle, they would praise their Maker's name,
Knowing, if he lost the battle, then the doctor was to blame.

'Twas the brave old virtuous doctor,
'Twas the good old faulty doctor,

'Twas the faithful country doctor-fighting stoutly all the same.

When so many pined in sickness he had stood so strongly by,
Half the people felt a notion that the doctor couldn't die;
They must slowly learn the lesson how to live from day to day,
And have somehow lost their bearings-now this landmark is away.
But perhaps it still is better that his busy life is done;
He has seen old views and patients disappearing, one by one;
He has learned that Death is master both of science and of art;
He has done his duty fairly and has acted out his part.

And the strong old country doctor,
And the weak old country doctor


 

Will Carleton (1845-1912) was born on a pioneer farm in the village of Hudson in Southern Michigan, the youngest of five children. His father was a farm worker who found work locally to support his large family. Will did well at school, and became a teacher at a country school, before returning to Hillsdale College, where he graduated in 1869. It was following this that he gained in confidence and began to seek publication of his writing. He moved to Boston in 1878 where he was to meet and marry his wife Anne Goodell, before moving to New York City in 1882 where he continued to publish his poems and lecture until 1907, when he was given a heroes homecoming on deciding to settle back in Michigan after his wifes death (in 1904). In 1919 an act was passed in Michigan making it a duty upon teachers to teach at least one of his poems to children in school, and October 21st is Officially 'Will Carleton Day' in Michigan.


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